gt; Secondly, I come from a Red Had background and find it hard to understand how
> System-V style init scripts are implemented in Debian. For example, in the
> most used start/kill link containers such as /etc/rc3.d, /etc/rc5.d no kill
> links are present.
>
> Which brings me to m
' and unloaded
after 'networking' is stopped.
What I came to realize is that no kill symbolic link existed for networking
So, my first question is:
- when does 'networking' come down?
Secondly, I come from a Red Had background and find it hard to understand how
S
--xXmbgvnjoT4axfJE
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Hi List,
SCO is FUD'ing like a MUD'er:
http://www.caldera.com/products/ssvl/ssvl_faq.html
"1. Why is SCO creating the SCO System V for Linux product?
SCO has a large amount of intell
On Tue, Jan 14, 2003 at 08:36:16AM +0100, Alberto Cabello Sanchez wrote:
>
> Where could I find information about BSD and SisV (no AIX or
> Solaris or Linux or ...) and their differences ?
There's a pretty comprehensive paper describing several systems for
managing services at
http://people.debia
On Tue, Jan 14, 2003 at 08:36:16AM +0100, Alberto Cabello Sanchez wrote:
> Hi,
> Where could I find information about BSD and SisV (no AIX or
> Solaris or Linux or ...) and their differences ?
try in /usr/share/doc/sysvinit for your sysv based system (which
is probably what you're using right now)
El Mon, Jan 13, 2003 at 04:32:07PM -0500, sean finney escribió:
> ok, a quick rundown:
>
> sysv is the (debian default) system that uses
>
> /etc/init.d
> /etc/rc2.d (et c)
> and starts and stops scripts with scripts like
> /etc/rc2.d/S99fooservice
>
> the file-rc (or bsd-ish) init system has
>
On Mon, Jan 13, 2003 at 11:38:36AM -0500, Thomas H. George wrote:
> I'm not sure about the names. The one computer which was using this
> system wrote 'I see you are using System-V' when I ran the linux-wlan-ng
> configuration and I thought it was editing the runlevel
t; Wouldn't that be BSD-style boot then, rather than SysV?
>
> -rob
I'm not sure about the names. The one computer which was using this
system wrote 'I see you are using System-V' when I ran the linux-wlan-ng
configuration and I thought it was editing the runlevel.conf fi
On Sun, Jan 12, 2003 at 04:11:00PM +, Colin Watson wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 12, 2003 at 10:30:20AM -0500, Thomas H. George,,, wrote:
> > I have two computers. At some time in the past I found an instruction
> > which replaced all the individual rc?.d files with a single
> > runlevel.conf file in
On Sun, Jan 12, 2003 at 10:30:20AM -0500, Thomas H. George,,, wrote:
> I have two computers. At some time in the past I found an instruction
> which replaced all the individual rc?.d files with a single
> runlevel.conf file in /etc with references to the startup files in
> /etc/init.d.
>
> I h
On Sun, Jan 12, 2003 at 10:30:20AM -0500, Thomas H. George,,, wrote:
> I have two computers. At some time in the past I found an instruction
> which replaced all the individual rc?.d files with a single
> runlevel.conf file in /etc with references to the startup files in
> /etc/init.d.
Install
I have two computers. At some time in the past I found an instruction
which replaced all the individual rc?.d files with a single
runlevel.conf file in /etc with references to the startup files in
/etc/init.d.
I have lost/forgotten how to do this. I would like to convert my second
computer t
on Fri, Mar 08, 2002, Sean 'Shaleh' Perry ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
>
> On 08-Mar-2002 Jorge Escalante wrote:
> > Is Debian based on BSD or SysV?
> >
>
> sysV.
For init yes.
For userland, I'd say it's more a BSDish influence, with heavy GNU
tendencies (which are largely neither one nor the ot
On Fri, Mar 08, 2002 at 01:59:35PM -0500, Jorge Escalante wrote:
> Is Debian based on BSD or SysV?
There are elements of both. Linux systems tend to veer towards System V
(e.g. initscripts), but there are lots of BSD influences (for example,
ps is a mix of both).
--
Colin Wat
On 08-Mar-2002 Jorge Escalante wrote:
> Is Debian based on BSD or SysV?
>
sysV.
Is Debian based on BSD or SysV?
My Computer's Opinion
~~
if( desire == play_games() ){return getNintendo64();}
if( (desire == computing() ) (user != smart) ) {return getMicrosoft();}
if( ( desire == computing() )(user == smart) ){return getLinux();}
Manfred Kissel ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) said:
> is there a tool in the debian distribution like "ntsysv" in red-hat
> which i can manage my init scripts to start and stop in different
> runlevels.
Check out rcconf
Description: Configure rc?.d/ scripts
rcconf is the configuration tool of rc?.d/ direct
Manfred Kissel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>is there a tool in the debian distribution like "ntsysv" in red-hat
>which i can manage my init scripts to start and stop in different
>runlevels.
Yes: it's called update-rc.d. You'll already have it installed, as it's
part of the dpkg package.
(Admitted
hi,
is there a tool in the debian distribution like "ntsysv" in red-hat
which i can manage my init scripts to start and stop in different runlevels.
--
Manfred Kissel
Solution - The Computer People
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.solution.de
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